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#51
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Steve Nosko wrote:
Then I found this !! Looking for average power? eBay has great deals on new and used electronics, cars, apparel, collectibles, sporting goods and more. If you can t find it on eBay, it probably doesn t exist. Be thankful you weren't looking for 'average length'. 73, Ed. EI9GQ. -- Remove 'X' to reply via e-mail. Linux 2.6.7 |
#52
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Bill,
Did you read what I wrote? Or perhaps you don't believe it? If not, just pick up any textbook on basic electric circuit theory, where you'll find essentially the same explanation. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Bill Turner wrote: __________________________________________________ _______ Ok, I grant you that, but as I see it, in a resistive circuit RMS voltage causes RMS current to flow and the resultant power is RMS power. Why not? If DC volts x DC amps = DC power and Peak volts x peak amps = peak power then why does not RMS volts x RMS amps = RMS power? If you want to say that RMS power is the same as average power, I can live with that, but why say that RMS power is a meaningless concept? Oh well. You guys have given it a good try, but I remain unconvinced. Perhaps we should move on to the question of whether current flows from plus to minus or minus to plus. A lot of otherwise good engineers actually believe it to be the former. I love to hear them explain how a vacuum tube works. :-) -- Bill W6WRT |
#53
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"Bill Turner" wrote in message
... I'm becoming convinced this is more a question of semantics or of somebody's arbitrary definition than one of actual fact. I'm think it's more a question of consistency. If you define RMS voltage and current a certain way (that we're all in agreement with), it stands to reason that "RMS foo" should have a comparable definition. As Roy has shown, using that same definition makes "RMS power" of questionable utility. The fact that 'the audio guys' don't use that definition is unfortunate and something to be aware of, but arguably not something to be encouraged. :-) (On the other hand, getting the audio guys to agree to _any_ definitions can be dicey... their usage of 'RMS power' was motivated by other terms such as 'PEP' -- peak envelope power -- that have almost nothing to do with the utility of the amplifier whatsoever. It's not uncommon to see '100W PEP' amplifiers that come with little wall warts capable of delivering no more than, say, 3W average power.) |
#54
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Certainly there is such a thing as RMS power. It just isn't useful for
anything. The definitions I used aren't arbitrary at all, but widely accepted and agreed upon. It's true that some amateurs and consumer audio marketers have chosen not to use the accepted definitions, but their inventions shouldn't be given equal weight to ones which have been used for centuries and are universally accepted by the math, physics, and engineering communities. What's the problem with current flowing from plus to minus? I believe it was Ben Franklin who realized that there are two polarities of charge, and arbitrarily called one plus and one minus. If he had made the other choice, positive or negative charge would indeed flow the other way. I've been through technical school, where current was considered to flow from minus to plus, and engineering school, where the opposite definition was used. You can use either method and arrive at the correct answer, but you end up with quite a few more minus signs with the minus-to-plus convention. Since engineering is highly mathematical, the plus-to-minus convention makes sense for engineering because of the somewhat simpler equations that result. I've always thought that tech schools used the minus-to-plus convention because it made it easier for students to get an intuitive feel for how a vacuum tube operates. (It's hard to imagine positive charge leaving the plate and condensing on the hot cathode!) Now that fire-fets are (like some of us) largely relics of the past, and the importance of good communication between technicians and engineers is recognized, I'd be surprised if the minus-to-plus convention is still being taught even in tech schools -- if anyone has any recent information about this, I'd be interested to know. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Bill Turner wrote: On Fri, 08 Oct 2004 11:08:35 -0700, Roy Lewallen wrote: Did you read what I wrote? __________________________________________________ _______ Yes, of course. I'm becoming convinced this is more a question of semantics or of somebody's arbitrary definition than one of actual fact. My real disagreement is with the statement "There is no such thing as RMS power". The rest of the arguments here I have no real quarrel with. As far as I can tell, all the math presented here is correct, with the exception of the fellow who the wrong factor when converting RMS voltage to peak power. To each his own. Now, what about that current flow from plus to minus? :-) -- Bill W6WRT |
#55
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On Fri, 08 Oct 2004 12:36:06 -0700, Bill Turner
wrote: On Fri, 08 Oct 2004 11:08:35 -0700, Roy Lewallen wrote: Did you read what I wrote? _________________________________________________ ________ Yes, of course. I'm becoming convinced this is more a question of semantics or of somebody's arbitrary definition than one of actual fact. My real disagreement is with the statement "There is no such thing as RMS power". The rest of the arguments here I have no real quarrel with. As far as I can tell, all the math presented here is correct, with the exception of the fellow who the wrong factor when converting RMS voltage to peak power. To each his own. Now, what about that current flow from plus to minus? :-) You may be reading what people wrote but you are doing selective reading. You are only letting through things that agree with your preconceived beliefs and blocking out the logic. You have the bandwidth cranked in too tight, the notch filter set too deep on the wrong side of the pass band and the noise blanker on. You are complaining how bad the signals sound but if you read the manual you may be able to clear the problem. :) Roy said that there is rms power but that it has nothing to do with average power that we get when rms voltage and current are multiplied. I and others have said that there is no such thing as rms power. That is not a stand alone absolute fact obviously but in this context it is meaningless. You can find the rms value of any periodic wave just like you find the rms value of voltage or current. But finding the rms value of power is of no value. And you don't get it by multiplying rms voltage by rms current. Again, once you multiply an rms value by another rms value the answer you get is not rms. Rms is not a title. It is the result of a mathematical operation. Average power and rms power are not the same. 73 Gary K4FMX |
#56
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It's too bad you've chosen to limit your thinking in this way, but as
long as you can fit everything that interests you into the box you've created, I guess it doesn't cause you any problems. I'd think you'd have to avoid such topics as lightning and positive ion generators, though. It's a common mistake to equate "current" or "charge" with "electrons", but probably no more common than lack of understanding of what RMS and average mean. A lot of people seem to manage to maintain a more-or-less consistent view of electricity while carrying around some pretty mistaken ideas. In my experience, though, now and then they end up really stumped by something, while someone with a more complete view of basic electrical physics has an easy time understanding and analyzing what's going on. We all make our choices. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Bill Turner wrote: On Fri, 08 Oct 2004 13:59:57 -0700, Roy Lewallen wrote: What's the problem with current flowing from plus to minus? After much head-scratching, the only problem I can see is that it doesn't. It flows from minus to plus. I believe it was Ben Franklin who realized that there are two polarities of charge, and arbitrarily called one plus and one minus. If he had made the other choice, positive or negative charge would indeed flow the other way. Murphy triumphs again. What you say about the mathematics being made easier I can agree with. The trouble is, some engineers take it a step further and say "yes, current *really* does flow from plus to minus." I then ask them to explain how a vacuum tube works, especially why it needs a hot cathode to "accept" electrons. Blank stares. Ah, well. -- Bill W6WRT |
#57
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Bill Turner wrote:
On Fri, 08 Oct 2004 16:01:04 -0700, Roy Lewallen wrote: It's a common mistake to equate "current" or "charge" with "electrons", _________________________________________________ ________ What other kind of current is there besides the flow of electrons? Even the flow of "holes" in a semiconductor is propagated by the absence of electrons. And isn't charge merely the presence or absence of electrons? I'm not talking mathematical concepts, just the actual physical happening? One last try... When you look at the history, "current" and "flow of electrons" truly *are* two different things. They come from two different centuries of science and engineering. "Current" came first. As people invented electrical devices such as batteries, electromagnets, motors and generators, the concept developed that "electric current" must in fact be a flow of charged particles. However, you can't experiment on a battery without labeling the terminals, so the convention that "current flows from positive to negative" had to be established very early (by Faraday, I believe). The new technology of electrical engineering forged ahead for several decades without ever needing to know what those fundamental charged particles were. Faraday himself never knew. When the electron was finally identified, it was found to have a negative charge - which meant that what people had been calling "current" is actually a flow of electrons in the opposite direction. But by then there was absolutely no question of changing the conventions of what "current", "positive" and "negative" mean. Those conventions remain unchanged to this day. That was how we were taught it in school, at age 12: "Here's all the history" (as above, only with dates... which I've forgotten). "Hard luck that the electron turned out to have a negative charge. It makes life a bit more complicated." "'Current' is not the same as 'flow of electrons', because they're going in the opposite directions. Be careful to say the one you actually mean." "Don't worry, you'll learn to cope with it" - and so we did. It's only hard if you insist on *making* it hard. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
#58
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It's a universal tendency for people to simplify things in order to
understand them. That's fine, as long as they realize that their understanding is based on a simplification, and they don't try to apply it to areas where the simplification is no longer valid. While the idea of charge flow as electron flow works just fine in a vacuum tube, it isn't at all true in general. Current is the rate of flow of charge, which as I'll explain isn't the same as the flow of electrons. Charge can be positive or negative. A shortage of electrons in an atom's valence shell results in a positively charged atom (a positive ion), and an excess of electrons in a negatively charged one (a negative ion). In a conductor, electrons are quite free to move about. In a semiconductor, they're not, and the crystal lattice can contain either an excess of electrons (N type material), a deficiency of them (P type material), or a normal number (intrinsic material). In a vacuum tube, the flow of (negative) charge is simply the physical flow of electrons, and the flow of positive charge becomes a mathematical concept, moving the opposite direction. But this isn't necessarily so in other media. In a wire, for example, charge flows much faster (near the speed of light) than electrons (which flow at a rate on the order of a few miles per hour). If you jam a bunch of electrons into one end of a wire, an equal number very quickly pops out the other -- but these aren't the same ones that went into the other end -- those will slowly drift along the wire at a few miles per hour. The rate of charge flow is dictated by how long it took electrons to pop out of the other end of the wire after jamming some in the input end, not how long it takes the added electrons to drift their way along. So in a wire, for example, charge isn't the same as movement of electrons. If you try to envision physical current (charge flow) in a wire as being the same as physical current in a vacuum tube, you'll be misleading yourself. Now imagine sucking a bunch of electrons out of one end of the wire. There'll be an electron-poor region at the wire end. A "wave" of electron-poor region will propagate to the other end of the wire at nearly the speed of light, and a bunch of electrons will be sucked into the other end of the wire. The propagation of this wave of an electron-poor region is the physical flow of positive charge. Envision, if you must, sucking water through a drinking straw that's already filled with water. Bear in mind, though, that this isn't an exact model of what's happening, so be careful in using it. It's important to be able to separate the concepts of moving charges and moving electrons, if you're going to have the versatility of understanding things other than vacuum tubes, like positive ion generators, lightning, charge flow in a semiconductor, or even a wire. Once you do, it becomes just as easy to envision positive charge flow as negative charge flow. If you can't do this without imagining physical marble-like particles carrying the charge, you have no hope of understanding an electromagnetic field, or other more abstract and mathematical concepts. Roy Lewallen, W7EL -- A quick web search brought this brief explanation of how electrons behave in a conductor: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu...ic/ohmmic.html. I'm sure it would be easy to find a lot more good information (as well as some pretty bad stuff) if anyone is interested enough to look. Bill Turner wrote: On Fri, 08 Oct 2004 16:01:04 -0700, Roy Lewallen wrote: It's a common mistake to equate "current" or "charge" with "electrons", __________________________________________________ _______ What other kind of current is there besides the flow of electrons? Even the flow of "holes" in a semiconductor is propagated by the absence of electrons. And isn't charge merely the presence or absence of electrons? I'm not talking mathematical concepts, just the actual physical happening? -- Bill W6WRT |
#59
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It's a universal tendency for people to simplify things in order to
understand them. ============================= The universal tendency on this newsgroup is to overcomplicate things to further confuse matters. (If that's possible). There's nothing better than a very few carefully chosen words of plain, simple, factual English language. Responders should very carefully edit and summarise what they have to say before hitting the 'send' key. I hasten to say, Roy, you certainly do not fall into the 'careless' category. I am at present on Californian red Zinfandel. Where it got its name from I can't imagine. But on the side of the bottle it says it should be consumed within 1 year of purchase. There is still 364 days to go. ---- Reg, G4FGQ |
#60
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Correction:
The speed of electron flow in a conductor is more like a few feet per hour rather than a few miles per hour as I said, at reasonable current levels and wire sizes (but depending on the current and the wire diameter). The numerical example for copper shown at the web site I mentioned shows an electron drift velocity of 4.3 mm/s for a 1 mm diameter wire with 46 A current (which would probably explode the wire). This works out to about 51 feet/hour. At the more reasonable current of 3 A, the electron drift velocity drops to 0.28 mm/s, or about 3.3 feet/hour. The electron drift velocity is so slow because, even though an ampere of current is a seemingly staggering 6 X 10^18 electron charges per second, there are vastly more free electrons than this in even a small wire. (Again see the web site example, where the density is shown to be about 8.5 X 10^28 electrons/m^3, or about 6.7 X 10^22 electrons in the 1 mm diameter, 1 meter long wire in the example.)(*) Carefully using the drinking straw analogy again, imagine a very large diameter drinking straw (lots of free water "electrons"), where an ampere of current is represented by a tiny trickle of water. If you suck water out one end at the rate of "one ampere", it takes a long time for the actual water molecules at the other end of the straw to work their way up the straw. (*) You can, in fact, calculate the drift velocity somewhat more simply and perhaps more intuituvely than the author of that page did, knowing only the electron density and the size of the wire. From the wire size you can calculate its volume as 7.85 X 10^-7 m^3. Multiplying this by the electron density, you get the total number of free electrons it contains, about 6.7 X 10^22. So the wire holds 6.7 X 10^22 / 6 X 10^18 ~ 11,000 coulombs (ampere-seconds) of available charge. If we move charge through at the rate of 46 amperes as in the first example, it would take 11,000/46 ~ 240 seconds for an electron to move from one end of the wire to the other, a rate of one meter/240 seconds or about 4.2 mm/sec. Within roundoff error, this is what the author calculated. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Roy Lewallen wrote: . . . In a wire, for example, charge flows much faster (near the speed of light) than electrons (which flow at a rate on the order of a few miles per hour). . . . . . -- A quick web search brought this brief explanation of how electrons behave in a conductor: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu...ic/ohmmic.html. . . |
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